Wednesday, February 8, 2017

The office part two: Kill your darlings; skin the cat

I was a creative writing major in college. I'll always remember the admonition of our Senior Seminar professor to "kill your darlings." This means you have to cut those favorite sentences (or paragraphs, or characters!) that you love and have become attached to, but aren't working or furthering your aims with the piece.

I was always terrible at that.

Last week I showed you a design board for what the office could be, but isn't. Why not? Because of this rug.

This rug is my darling.

I got it at the tender age of 24, at the ABC Carpet and Home outlet in the Bronx. It was my first major house purchase (and remains one of the more expensive things I've ever bought.) It's big, and Turkish, and I think it represented "being a grown up." Standing in the vast warehouse and watching the men flip back rug after rug in stacks was intoxicating. The palette includes colors that are still favorites (aqua! chartreuse! terra cotta! Look no further than my portfolio to know I love these colors still.) And honestly, it makes a lot of sense, stylistically, in the space I lease, which has very pretty white tin ceilings.

The other reason I based by scheme on this rug? I already had it, and rugs are expensive. I liked the idea that using this rug would stretch my budget. Then I started looking for a table to use as a desk, and realized the rug was kind of bossy, and the table I needed was pretty specific. A french farmhouse table. Not too rustic, not too chunky, light of wood tone and elegant of line. You may be shocked to know that craigslist did not offer up such a table to me, and certainly not at a bargain price. All of a sudden, I was looking at spending close to $1000 on the right table to work with the rug I already had. I also started considering splurges on other items that would complement the rug, but which I might not otherwise buy. I bought chairs to make the rug "more modern" instead of using the Ghost chairs I already own.

Thanks Mary, it is so lovely! I could have made it work, but I think the point is that it isn't the right thing for the moment. I do feel lucky to have a basement to hold on to old things--it wasn't the case when we lived in smaller places/ bigger cities, so I totally appreciate it now!

About Me

Hi there.
I am a Minneapolis-based decorator and mother to two excellent girls. Though I work full time in this industry, I'm still a pretty big fangirl of all things interiors. Frankly, my family and friends can only take so much, so this is where I get into the nitty gritty to an unreasonable degree. Luckily the like-minded abound on the internet. I'm so glad you found me.